Title: Quantitative research methods
1Quantitative research methods
- Module 1 Course
- Session 7
- Kim Schrøder
2Agenda
- Target group segmentation
- Questionnaire design for survey research
3Audience survey research
- "Surveys gather information from people by asking
them questions about themselves. Surveying
implies space viewing a whole, such as a social
landscape, from a particular vantage point"
(Schrøder et al. 2003225) (Murray) - Ex. Australian Everyday Cultures Study
- Surveys use questionnaires we concentrate on
questionnaire construction, not the use of
surveys or the statistical analysis of the data. - BUT FIRST
4The logic of target group segmentation
- The need to identify target groups (Ascheberg
article) - The need to design relevant, meaningful
communication - The need to identify groups that have shared
universes of meaning and relevance
(interpretative repertoires) - Traditional segmentation demographically defined
groups social class (income, education), gender,
age, urbanicity, ethnicity, etc. - This approach has increasing validity problems,
due to
5- The late modern condition
- Less stability, more 'mobility' in the social and
cultural landscape - Interests and priorities are fluid, decreasing
loyalty and stability (e.g. political
inclination, product preferences, shopping
patterns) - More freedom of choice cultural tastes,
lifestyles, social values. Therefore - The demographic fallacy you miss the target!
- The value segmentation alternative
- SIGMA, SINUS, MINERVA, RISC, etc.
6Value segmentation modelProcedure
- Start with values, tastes, lifestyles ask people
through a survey - Identify patterns here lifestyle segmentation!
- Correllate with demographic variables there are
correspondences with economic and cultural
capital (Bourdieu 1979/1984, Dahl 1996) - P. Bourdieu, Distinction. A social critique of
the judgement of taste, 1979/1984, London RKP. - Henrik Dahl, "Sociologi og målgrupper. Nogle
erfaringer med at operationalisere Bourdieu",
MedieKultur 24, 1996.
7How to do lifestyle segmentation
- Empirical generation of set of values/tastes
(through qualitative interviews) - Mapping value- and taste relations in the
sociocultural landscape Minerva Value Chart
(through surveys, correspondence analysis) - Correllate value chart with social theory what
does the value pattern mean? The search for
generative causes Innovation/Tradition,
Idealism/Pragmaticism. - Other segmentation models SIGMA/SINU, KOMPAS
(left/right mirror!). - Relate RISC/Minerva value chart to people
individuals and groups 4 colours / 4 corners of
the world
8Minerva value chart
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10Gallup Kompas
11The 4 Minerva (colour) segments
- BLUE (north-west) Pragmatic-innovative,
self-confident, consumption-oriented, rich in
economic and cultural capital (esp. the former).
Central values technology, challenge, work over
leisure. Business manager. - GREEN (north-east) Idealistic-innovative,
goal-oriented, 'good taste', ecological
attitudes, rich in cultural capital not quite
matched by economic capital. Central values
personal expression, the environment before
industry, heterarchy. Highschool teacher.
12- PINK (south-east) Idealistic-traditional,
family- and health-oriented, more cultural than
economic capital, but not too much of either.
Central values fitness and health, exploring
mental frontiers, fear of technology. Office
worker, health care worker. - PURPLE (south-west) Pragmatic-traditional,
stability-oriented, low in both economic and
cultural capital, tending towards the
underprivileged Central values conformity,
selfishness, economic security. Unskilled
labourer.
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14How to do lifestyle segmentation (2)
- 6. Once you have identified the segments Locate
specific consumption/political/cultural practices
in the chart - Newspaper/magazine readers, TV-channel and
program viewers, etc. - Holiday makers by holiday type
- Car owners by brand preference
- Political party voters
- Overweight, fast-food individuals
- Alcohol, smoking individuals
- Etc.
- 7. Plan the media exposure of your target group
15Benefits of the segmentation model
- Improving campaign aim the model is 'rifle
ammunition'! - Knowledge of the value/meaning universe of the
target group - Appeal to the values that are relevant to the
intended recipients - Choose the media that fit your product's consumer
profile - A new theoretical relationship between
individuals, groups and the wider social
structure (e.g. Bourdieu habitus practices,
capital, etc.)
16Segmentation exercise
- Test yourself on the Gallup KOMPAS website
www.tns-gallup.dk/test/kompas.asp - One Dane in each group
- Each group chooses one member as guinea pig
he/she fills out the questionnaire - Bring the KOMPAS profile back to the class.
17Critical comments to test
- Reductionism Minerva has only 4 segments. Kompas
has 8, Sigma 10. This doesn't do justice to the
complexity of lifestyles. - Inaccuracy a certain margin of error, esp. with
the shorthand versions (MiniRISC Kompas
self-test battery)
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19Questionnaire construction(Researching Audiences
ch. 13)
- The questionnaire is a lens it determines what
you can see choose the right one! - A survey delivers a snapshot of the target group
- The photography metaphor useful because it
alerts us to the constructedness in many
dimensions of surveys - "Apparently documentary in its realism, but
equally constructive of its object" (245)
20The survey as process The photo metaphor
- Choosing the lens
- Setting the F-stop (aperture) how much light to
let in (closed- vs. open-ended) - Focus behavioral, knowledge, attitudes,
emotions. - Camera angles (question types) dichotomous,
ranking, rating, trade-offs. - Dark room, developing the film interpretation
- Coding for the database. Numbers, percentages,
means/medians, cross-tabulation, regression,
cluster, factor. - The photo gallery writing it up and
communicating findings
21Designing a questionnaire
- Many aspects of questionnaire construction are
shared with qualitative fieldwork design (because
verbal) - Rapport, trust
- Ethics of interaction (anonymity, intrusion)
- Epistemology (playing the interview game, the
halo effect, managing non-attitudes, saying
versus doing, lying, etc.)
22Exercise for Session 7Designing a questionnaire
- Scenario A qualitative study of the Danes' use
of news media as a democratic resource found
that - "any evaluation of the Danish news market must
now also take into account the growing readiness
of large sections of the Danish population to
supplement a staple diet of Danish media with
English and American ones, especially
international TV channels like CNN and BBC World,
and Internet based news sources. Consequently,
assessment of the democratic enlightenment of the
Danish population must include the extent to
which Danes draw on news sources in English"
(K.C. Schrøder L. Phillips
23Designing a questionnaire (cont.)
- Topic of investigation The use of international
media in English among the Danish population. - Task With a maximum of app. 10 questions, design
a questionnaire that explores the topic of
investigation. Bring the draft questionnaire to
the next class on a USB, or email it to your own
email account so that you may access it from
campus. - Now group members compare notes, produce a
common product. - Discussion of draft questionnaire by KSc.